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RE: Consent Makes all the Difference

in #anarchy7 years ago

But the videos don't offer anything at all. In fact they seem to boil down to displacing what is already there, and turning it all into lesser, for-profit systems, which very quickly looks like a horrendous idea.

Conceptually speaking, what is the difference between companies such as Dawn Defence and Tanner Justice, and democratically elected political parties? By incentivising the outcome of justice, his second video pictures a type of distopian nightmare that has been explored over and over again in countless stories. Humans are reduced to mere puppets or potential bags of money, that have to conform to a single end goal in exchange for their very identity. It's a caricature of exactly what you despise.

In his 'model', people are reduced to automatons where everyone has to think the same way (where have we heard that before?), and his view of 'government' seems to be this almost childish image of an authoritarian dictator, benign or not. In fact he speaks of it as if it's a single person, or body moving in perfect unison. He also seems to presume that government is by definition above the law. It is not. That's why, for example, currently in the US, Donald Trump can't get his muslim ban through.

The end result of it is still what you call violence. He talks of loss of social status, loss of financial means, loss of independence, imprisonment... But it is worse - it's now implemented for profit, and how does that sound? If you think corrupt governments are bad (and they are), try a system like this guy's. His example of conflict resolution through competing companies is not only utterly naive, it's also incredibly costly. The only result will either be a continuous 'search for justice' ad infinitum where everyone loses and the companies win, or large scale conflict.

Honestly, society has progressed a little bit since the invention of writing. Is it perfect? No of course not. It's continuously evolving with ups and downs and faster than ever before. And I think we may well agree on a lot of things should we discuss them. But reducing it, like this person does, to the equivalent of a car being any old box with four wheels underneath isn't very helpful.

Suffice to say. I'm not convinced...

As for the moral argument, is parenting violence? Is education?